The Human Rights Watch called on the Ethiopian government on Thursday
to release all political prisoners and stop the use of lethal force
against protesters. It also demanded the regime to allow peaceful
protest.
“The Ethiopian government should release unjustly detained opposition
figures including Bekele Gerba, deputy chairman of the Oromo Federalist
Congress (OFC), and rein in the excessive use of lethal force by the
security forces. They should also allow people to peacefully protest and
to express dissent and ensure that farmers and pastoralists are
protected from arbitrary or forced displacement without consultation and
adequate compensation,” HRW said in a dispatch by Felix Horne,
researcher for the Horn of Africa.
“These steps would be an important way to show Oromo protesters that
the government is changing tack and is genuinely committed to respecting
rights. Without this kind of policy shift, desperate citizens will
widen their search for other options for addressing grievances,” the
dispatch said.
The report recalled that over the past eight weeks, Ethiopia’s
largest region, Oromia, has been hit by a wave of mass protests over the
expansion of the municipal boundary of the capital, Addis Ababa. The
generally peaceful protests were sparked by fears the expansion will
displace ethnic Oromo farmers from their land, the latest in a long list
of Oromo grievances against the government.
It said the crisis has taken another worrying turn: on December 23,
the authorities arrested Bekele Gerba, deputy chairman of the Oromo
Federalist Congress (OFC), Oromia’s largest legally registered political
party. There had been fears he would be re-arrested as the government
targets prominent Oromo intellectuals who they feel have influence over
the population. He was first taken to the notorious Maekalawi prison,
where torture and other ill-treatment are routine. The 54-year-old
foreign language professor was reportedly hospitalized shortly after his
arrest but his whereabouts are now unknown, raising concerns of an
enforced disappearance. Other senior OFC leaders have been arbitrarily
arrested in recent weeks or are said to be under virtual house arrest.
This is not the first time Bekele has been arrested. In 2011, he was
convicted under Ethiopia’s draconian counterterrorism law of being a
member of the banned Oromo Liberation Front – a charge often used to
silence politically engaged ethnic Oromos who oppose the ruling
Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). He spent four
years in prison and was only released shortly before the elections last
May. The OFC ran candidates but the EPRDF coalition won all 547
parliamentary seats, a stark reflection of the unfair electoral playing
field.
Bekele is deeply committed to nonviolence and has consistently
advocated that the OFC participate in future elections, despite the
EPRDF’s stranglehold on the political landscape.
By treating both opposition politicians and peaceful protesters with
an iron fist, the government is closing off ways for Ethiopians to
nonviolently express legitimate grievances. This is a dangerous
trajectory that could put Ethiopia’s long-term stability at risk, the
report said.
Security forces have killed at least 140 protesters and injured many
more, according to activists, in what may be the biggest crisis to hit
Ethiopia since the 2005 election violence.
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